The difference between Crockard and Steeping

When used as nouns, crockard means a 13th-century coin minted in europe as a debased counterfeit copy of the sterling silver penny of king edward i, at first legally accepted as a halfpenny and then outlawed, whereas steeping means an instance of something being steeped.


check bellow for the other definitions of Crockard and Steeping

  1. Crockard as a noun (historical, numismatics):

    A 13th-century coin minted in Europe as a debased counterfeit copy of the sterling silver penny of King Edward I, at first legally accepted as a halfpenny and then outlawed.

  1. Steeping as a verb:

  1. Steeping as a noun:

    An instance of something being steeped; a wetting.

  1. Steeping as a noun (historical, numismatics):

    A 13th-century coin circulated in Ireland as a debased sterling silver penny, outlawed under King Edward I.